Slip Op. 08-58
UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
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NAKORNTHAI STRIP MILL PUBLIC :
COMPANY LIMITED, :
:
Plaintiff, :
: Before: Pogue, Judge
v. : Court No. 07-00180
:
UNITED STATES, :
: Public Version
Defendant, :
:
UNITED STATES STEEL :
CORPORATION, :
:
Defendant- :
Intervenor. :
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OPINION
[Plaintiff’s Motion for Judgment on the Agency Record granted-in-
part and denied-in-part.]
Dated: May 28, 2008
Vinson & Elkins (Kenneth J. Pierce, Robert L. LaFrankie, Victor S.
Mroczka) for the Plaintiff.
Gregory G. Katsas, Acting Assistant Attorney General; Jeanne E.
Davidson, Director, Patricia M. McCarthy, Assistant Director,
Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department of
Justice (Claudia Burke); Matthew D. Walden, Attorney, Of Counsel,
Office of the Chief Counsel for Import Administration, U.S.
Department of Commerce, for the United States Department of
Commerce
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP (Robert E. Lighthizer,
John J. Mangan, Jeffrey Gerrish, Luke A. Meisner) for the
Defendant-Intervenor.
Pogue, Judge: In this action, Plaintiff Nakornthai Strip Mill
Public Company Limited (“Nakornthai”) challenges the final results
of the Department of Commerce’s (“Commerce”) administrative review
Court No. 07-00180 Page 2
of the antidumping order on Nakornthai’s imports. Certain Hot-
Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products from Thailand, 72 Fed. Reg.
27,802 (Dep’t Commerce May 17, 2007)(final results and partial
recision of antidumping duty administrative review)(“Final
Results”). Specifically, Nakornthai challenges Commerce’s
selection of the invoice date as the date of sale in the United
States for Plaintiff’s merchandise.1 Because of Commerce’s
determination that the material terms of the contract for
Plaintiff’s sales were not final by the contract date, Commerce
utilized the invoice date as the date of sale.
The court finds that Commerce’s conclusion identifying the
potentially material terms of Plaintiff’s contract is based on the
agency’s reasonable interpretation of its own regulation; therefore,
the court affirms this legal conclusion. However, because
Commerce’s factual finding of finality of the terms of sale is
incomplete, the court remands this issue for further consideration.
The court also refrains from adjudicating Nakornthai’s request for
consideration of alternate dates--other than the contract date–- as
the date of sale because Nakornthai failed to exhaust its
administrative remedies on these claims.
1
“In general terms, an antidumping analysis involves a
comparison of export price or constructed export in the United
States with normal value in the foreign market.” 19 C.F.R.
§ 351.401(a) The identification of a “date of sale” for U.S.
price may affect its comparison with sales in the foreign or
“home” market, for example, if exchange rates are changing during
the period of review.
Court No. 07-00180 Page 3
Background
The original antidumping investigation, which gave rise to the
proceeding here, involved hot-rolled carbon steel products imported
from Thailand by Sahaviriya Steel Industries (“SSI”). In the
initial investigation, Commerce found that SSI was dumping the
subject merchandise and imposed a duty of 4.44 percent. Certain
Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products From Thailand, 66 Fed. Reg.
59,562, 59,563 (Dep’t Commerce Nov. 29, 2001) (notice of
antidumping duty order).2 After Commerce published an opportunity
to request an administrative review of the order, see Antidumping
or Countervailing Duty Order, Finding, or Suspended Investigation,
70 Fed. Reg. 65,883 (Dep’t Commerce Nov. 1, 2005) (opportunity to
request administrative review); see also Section 751 of the Tariff
Act of 1930, 19 U.S.C. § 1675,3 Defendant-intervenor U.S. Steel,
and Nucor Corporation (“Nucor”), pursuant to 19 C.F.R.
§ 351.213(b)(1), requested an administrative review for the period
2
The November 29, 2001 antidumping order originally
subjected SSI to a 4.44 percent antidumping duty, which was
subsequently lowered to 3.86 percent. Nakornthai was subject to
the same antidumping duty rate, under a separate “all others”
rate category, up until the time it received its own company-
specific rate in the proceeding challenged here. See, e.g., Final
Results, 72 Fed. Reg. 27,802 and accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum 2, available at
http://ia.ita.doc.gov/frn/summary/THAILAND/E7-9526-1.pdf (“Issues
and Decision Mem.”).
3
Further citation to the Tariff Act of 1930 are to the
relevant provisions of Title 19 of the U.S. Code, 2000 edition.
Court No. 07-00180 Page 4
of November 1, 2004, through October 31, 2005.4 Commerce granted
the request, see Initiation of Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Administrative Reviews and Request for Revocation in Part, 70 Fed.
Reg. 76,024, 76,025 (Dep’t Commerce Dec. 22, 2005), and issued an
initial antidumping questionnaire (“Part A”) to Nakornthai on
January 3, 2006. Three other sets of questionnaires followed, Parts
B, C, and D, and by March 9, 2006, Nakornthai had also responded to
these supplemental questionnaires.
Nakornthai’s questionnaire responses indicated that, during
the period of review, Nakorthai contracted with one wholesaler of
metals and metal ores, to import its products. This contract was
the only U.S. sale of the subject merchandise that Nakornthai made
during the period of review. Pl.’s Mot. for J. on the Agency R. 2
(“Pl.’s Mot.”); Def.-Intervenor’s Mem. in Opp. to Pl.’s Mot. for J.
on the Agency R. 1 (“Def.-Intervenor’s Opp. Mem.”). Nakornthai’s
original contract, dated in a specific month in 2004, identified
4
19 C.F.R. § 351.213(b) states:
Request for administrative review. (1) Each year during
the anniversary month of the publication of an
antidumping or countervailing duty order, a domestic
interested party or an interested party described in
section 771(9)(B) of the Act (foreign government) may
request in writing that the Secretary conduct an
administrative review under section 751(a)(1) of the
Act of specified individual exporters or producers
covered by an order . . . if the requesting person
states why the person desires the Secretary to review
those particular exporters or producers.
19 C.F.R. § 351.213(b)(1).
Court No. 07-00180 Page 5
multiple line items designating products to be shipped to several
end users in the United States. The parties later made three
changes to the contract. The first amendment, made the next month
in 2004, removed the specification of the range of quantities to be
purchased for each item to be sold under the contract (the “per-
item tolerance level”),5 leaving only a total quantity tolerance
level. The second amendment, made in yet again the following month,
changed the payment terms, and the third amendment, made in yet
again the following month, changed both the expiration date on the
letter of credit and the last shipment date for the merchandise. In
other words, in each of the three months following the original
contract, the parties amended its terms.
Nakornthai shipped its products under this contract shortly
after the third contractual amendment. The day after the last date
of the shipments, Nakornthai issued a final invoice for its
products.
Nakornthai’s responses to Commerce’s questionnaires identified
its original contract date as the United States date of sale.
Attach. to Letter from Kenneth J. Pierce, Willkie Farr & Gallagher
LLP, on behalf of Nakornthai; to the Honorable Carlos M. Gutierrez,
Secretary of Commerce, Re: Antidumping Duty Administrative Review
of Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products from Thailand:
5
The “tolerance” level is expressed as a quantity, plus or
minus (+/-) a specified percentage.
Court No. 07-00180 Page 6
Resp. to Section A of the Department’s Questionnaire (Feb. 14,
2005), C.R. Doc. 3 at A-3 (“Nakornthai’s Resp. to Part A
Questionnaire”). Nakornthai also stated in its responses that it
considered the contract’s amendments to be minimal and not material
to the overall contract and sale. Id. at A-27; Pl.’s Resp. to the
Dep’t’s July 26, 2006, Third Supplemental Questionnaire Re: Section
C, Aug. 7, 2006, at 6.
Commerce made a preliminary determination that Nakornthai’s
products had been sold at less than fair value, i.e., a dumping
determination, for the period of review. Commerce’s preliminary
determination did not adopt the contract date as the date of sale
as Nakornthai had proposed in its questionnaire responses. Rather,
Commerce, in calculating the dumping margin, used the final invoice
date as the U.S. date of sale rather than the original contract
date. Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products from Thailand,
71 Fed. Reg. 65,458, 65,461-62 (Dep’t Commerce Oct. 31, 2006)
(preliminary results of antidumping duty administrative review and
rescission in part)(“Preliminary Results”). In addition, Commerce
determined that the amendments made material changes to the
contract. In coming to these conclusions, Commerce reasoned, first,
that department regulations created a presumption in favor of using
the invoice date as the date of sale. Furthermore, Commerce
reasoned, the fact that the parties had made three amendments to
the contract in the space of a few months meant that the terms of
Court No. 07-00180 Page 7
the contract were not settled until the commercial invoice actually
issued.
Commerce’s preliminary results also reasoned that the
amendments to the contract constituted material changes to the
terms of sale because they “altered the payments terms and the
letter of credit.” Mem. From Stephen Bailey, Case Analyst, to File,
Preliminary Results Analysis for Nakornthai Strip Mill Public Co.
Ltd: Antidumping Duty Administrative Review of Certain Hot-Rolled
Carbon Steel Flat Products from Thailand, C.R. Doc. 39, 2 (Dep’t
Commerce Oct. 31, 2006)(“Preliminary Results Mem.”). In Commerce’s
view, the fact that material terms were being changed throughout
the period of review also supported its choice of the invoice date
as the date of sale; not only were the terms of the contract not
finalized until the invoice issued, but also, the changes being
made affected quantities at the heart of the contract. Def.’s Mem.
in Opp. to Pl.’s Mot. for J. Upon the Admin. R., 8-9 (“Def.’s Opp.
Mem.”).
After Commerce made its preliminary determination, Nakornthai
submitted a case brief, pursuant to 19 C.F.R. § 351.309(c).6 In
6
19 C.F.R. § 351.309(c)(2) specifies:
The case brief must present all arguments that continue
in the submitter’s view to be relevant to the
Secretary’s final determination or final results,
including any arguments presented before the date of
publication of the preliminary determination or
preliminary results. As part of the case brief, parties
(continued...)
Court No. 07-00180 Page 8
its case brief, Nakornthai objected to Commerce’s use of the
invoice date and argued generally for an alternative date of sale
to be used instead of the invoice date. Specifically, the company
again proposed that Commerce use the date on which the contract was
formed, i.e., the original contract date. Case Brief of Nakornthai
Strip Mill Public Company Limited, 6-7 (Jan. 8, 2007)(“Nakornthai
Case Br.”).
Nakornthai also objected to Commerce’s determination that the
amendments to the contract affected the material terms of the sale.
Nakornthai argued that “[n]one of [the changes] impacted the
material terms of sale (i.e., price and quantity).” Nakornthai Case
Br. 3. “In other words, there is no variance in the material terms
of sale from the contract to the invoice.” Id. at 4. The contract’s
first amendment “merely modified the tolerance level in the
contract from per item to per total.” Id. While the contract’s
second amendment changed the timing of the payment, and the third
amendment changed the letter of credit’s expiration date and the
last date of shipment, Nakornthai maintained that the contract’s
“material terms,” i.e., price and quantity, were not changed by any
of the three amendments. Id.
6
(...continued)
are encouraged to provide a summary of the arguments
not to exceed five pages and a table of statutes,
regulations, and cases cited.
Court No. 07-00180 Page 9
In its final determination, Commerce continued to use the
invoice date as the U.S. date of sale, based on its determination
that one of the contract’s amendments made a material change to the
contract. Final Results, 72 Fed. Reg. 27,802, and accompanying
Proprietary Arguments from the Issues and Decision Memorandum for
the Final Results of Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products
from Thailand 13-14 (“Proprietary Issues and Decision Mem.”)
Commerce reasoned that by eliminating the tolerance levels for
individual line items in the contract, Nakornthai could potentially
alter the mix of products ordered.7 The final dumping
determination issued on May 7, 2007. Final Results, 72 Fed. Reg.
27,802.
Nakornthai now seeks review of Commerce’s determination,
challenging it as contrary to law and unsupported by substantial
evidence. Specifically, as the court understands Plaintiff’s
complaint, pursuant to USCIT R. 56.2, Plaintiff seeks judgment on
the agency record, declaring contrary to law Commerce’s conclusion
that the specification of line-item quantities in Plaintiff’s
contract for the sale of merchandise imported into the United
States was a material term of that contract. Plaintiff also seeks
a judgment declaring unsupported by substantial evidence Commerce’s
7
Commerce also noted that it was moot whether changes to
the payment terms or the letter of credit constituted changes to
material sales terms. See Proprietary Issues and Decision Mem.
14.
Court No. 07-00180 Page 10
determination that, because said line-item quantities were subject
to change after the contract was signed, the material terms of
Plaintiff’s contract were not final or established by the contract
date.
Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
28 U.S.C. § 1581(c) provides jurisdiction for the court’s
review of civil actions brought under Section 516A of the Tariff
Act of 1930. 19 U.S.C. § 1516a. Under 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a), the
Court reviews determinations made, pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1675, by
the Department of Commerce during its administrative review. See 19
U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(A)(i)(I) and (B)(iii).
In such a review, the court will uphold “any determination,
finding or conclusion” which the agency has made unless it is
“unsupported by substantial evidence on the record, or otherwise
not in accordance with law.” 19. U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B). Fujitsu
Gen. Ltd. v. United States, 88 F.3d 1034, 1038 (Fed. Cir.
1996)(quoting 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)).
Discussion
To apply the standard of review to Nakornthai’s claim, the
court will divide its discussion into four parts. First, the court
will summarize the statutory and regulatory provisions relevant to
Commerce’s determination. Second, the court will explain its
Court No. 07-00180 Page 11
conclusion that Commerce’s interpretation of the materiality
provision in the relevant regulation is reasonable and therefore in
accordance with law. Third, the court will consider Commerce’s
factual finding of finality of the terms of Nakornthai’s sale and
whether that finding is supported by substantial evidence in the
record. Fourth, the court will discuss its decision not to further
adjudicate Nakornthai’s request for consideration of alternate
dates--other than the contract date–- as the date of sale because
Nakornthai has failed to exhaust its administrative remedies on
these claims.
A. Relevant Statuory and Regulatory Provisions
The statutory provisions relevant to Nakornthai’s challenge to
Commerce’s determination of a date of sale are 19 U.S.C. §§ 1673
and 1677a. These provisions leave the precise definition of “date
of sale” to the agency. Section 1677a(a), for example, reads,
“[t]he term ‘export price’ means the price at which the subject
merchandise is first sold (or agreed to be sold) before the date of
importation by the producer or exporter of the subject merchandise
. . . .” 19. U.S.C. § 1677a(a). This provision does not determine
whether the date of sale is the contract date or invoice date; it
could be either, if, as in the present case, both the date of sale
and the date of invoice occurred before the merchandise was
actually brought into the U.S. Because the statute is ambiguous,
Court No. 07-00180 Page 12
the court will defer to Commerce’s reasonable interpretation of the
statute. Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984).
Commerce’s interpretation is contained in its regulations
which state a presumption in favor of the use of the invoice date
as the date of sale. 19 C.F.R. § 351.401(i)(2007).8 See Hornos
Electricos de Venezuela, S.A. v. United States, 27 CIT 1522, 1535-
36, 285 F. Supp. 2d 1353, 1366-67 (2003). Consequently, unless the
party seeking to establish a date of sale other than the invoice
date produces sufficient evidence to establish, to Commerce’s
satisfaction, that “a different date better reflects the date on
which the exporter or producer establishes the material terms of
sale,” Commerce will use the invoice date as the date of sale. 19
C.F.R. § 351.401(i)(2007); Accord Hornos Electricos de Venezuela,
27 CIT at 1537, 285 F. Supp. 2d at 1367.
In Nakornthai’s case, Commerce determined that the quantity
tolerance level specified in the contract was a “material term[] of
8
That section reads:
in identifying the date of sale of the subject
merchandise or foreign like product, the Secretary
normally will use the date of invoice, as recorded in
the exporter or producer’s records kept in the ordinary
course of business. However, the Secretary may use a
date other than the date of invoice if the Secretary is
satisfied that a different date better reflects the
date on which the exporter or producer establishes the
material terms of sale.
19 C.F.R. § 351.401(i).
Court No. 07-00180 Page 13
[the] sale.” Therefore, the next issue is whether Commerce’s
determination that the quantity tolerance level constituted a
material term of Nakornthai’s contract is a reasonable
interpretation of Commerce’s regulation and is therefore in
accordance with law.
B. Commerce’s Determination of Potential Materiality is Reasonable
From the beginning of the administrative process, Nakornthai
has argued that the changes it had made to the contract were
minimal and therefore immaterial. In response to the first
questionnaire it received from Commerce, Nakornthai stated, “during
[the fourth period of review], for U.S. sales, there were only two
minor changes, (i.e., tolerance applicability and payment terms)
after the terms of the contract were agreed upon . . . .”
Nakornthai’s Resp. to Part A Questionnaire C.R. Doc. 3 at A-27.9
The problem with this argument is that it conflates a factual
issue, i.e., the extent of the actual change in contract terms,
9
In response to a question in Commerce’s third
questionnaire, Nakornthai also stated that all the copies of the
final invoices that it had provided to its wholesaler “support a
finding of contract date as the date of sale because all material
terms of sale were set in the contract (i.e., there is no
variance in material terms between the contract and the
invoices.)” Attach. to Letter from Kenneth J. Pierce, Willkie
Farr & Gallagher LLP, on behalf of Nakornthai; to the Honorable
Carlos M. Gutierrez, Secretary of Commerce, Re: Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review of Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat
Products from Thailand: Resp. to the Department’s Third
Supplemental Questionnaire Re: Section C (Aug. 7, 2006), C.R.
Doc. 30 at 6.
Court No. 07-00180 Page 14
with a legal issue, i.e., whether a particular contractual term is
a “material” term of sale.
Commerce’s preliminary results acknowledged Nakornthai’s
argument that the changes contained in the contract’s amendments
were minimal, but noted that one of these amendments changed the
tolerance level for the products at issue. Preliminary Results
Mem., C.R. Doc. 39, 2. On the strength of this change, Commerce
determined that “material” changes to the contract had occurred as
a result of the contract’s amendments. Id. Nakornthai challenged
this finding in its case brief before Commerce, arguing that the
only material terms of a contract were price and quantity, to which
there had been no changes. Attach. to Letter from Kenneth J.
Pierce, Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP, on behalf of Nakornthai; to
the Honorable Carlos M. Gutierrez, Secretary of Commerce, Re:
Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products from Thailand: Case
Brief of Nakornthai Strip Mill Public Co. Ltd. (Jan. 8, 2007), C.R.
Doc. 45 at 3.
In its rebuttal brief, U.S. Steel cited precedent to argue
that Commerce had a long history of considering tolerance to be a
material term. Attach. to Letter from Robert E. Lighthizer,
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, LLP, on behalf of U.S. Steel;
to the Honorable Carlos M. Gutierrez, Secretary of Commerce, Re:
Fourth Administrative Review of Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel
Flat Products from Thailand (Jan. 16, 2007), C.R. Doc 48 at 5, n.
Court No. 07-00180 Page 15
16 (“U.S. Steel Case Br.”)(citing Certain Hot-Rolled Steel Flat
Products from Thailand, 66 Fed. Reg. 49,622 (Dep’t Commerce Sept.
28, 2001)(notice of final determination of sales at less than fair
value)(“Final Results of Original Investigation”), and accompanying
Issues and Decisions Mem. (Comment 9)(where the contract has a
built in tolerance of +/- 10 percent and quantity changes occurred
within such delivery tolerances, “we agree with petitioners that
any differences between the quantity ordered and the quantity
shipped which fall within the tolerance specified by the entire
contract do not constitute changes in the material terms of
sale.”)); see also Certain Hot-Rolled Flat-Rolled Carbon Quality
Steel Products from Brazil, 64 Fed. Reg. 38,756, 38,768 (Dep’t
Commerce July 19, 1999)(notice of final determination of sales at
less than fair value)(“[t]he Department considers the date of sale
to be the date on which all substantive terms of sale are agreed
upon by the parties. This normally includes the price, quantity,
delivery terms and payment terms.”). U.S. Steel also argued that
the elimination of the per item tolerance in the contract’s
amendments affected the product mix, a term which Commerce also
considers to be material. U.S. Steel Case Br. 5. Commerce agreed
with U.S. Steel’s logic and precedent and determined that changes
in tolerance could lead to changes in quantity, and therefore
constitute material changes.
Court No. 07-00180 Page 16
As noted above, the determination of whether a change in line-
item quantities is “material” for purposes of Commerce’s date of
sale regulation is a legal issue, i.e., it involves Commerce’s
interpretation of its own regulation. Here, Commerce has
interpreted “material terms of sale” to include the specification
of a quantity tolerance level. Such a determination is reviewed to
determine whether it is in accordance with law. To the court,
Commerce’s legal determination is reasonable because quantity
tolerance level may reasonably be viewed as specifying the amount
or quantity of the merchandise to be shipped. Accordingly, the
quantity tolerance may reasonably be considered material to the
terms of sale. See SeAH Steel Corp. v. United States, 25 CIT 133,
135 (2001)(finding line-item quantity data necessary to a
determination of material terms of sale). Considered in this
light, Commerce’s adherence to its precedent, in its regulatory
interpretation here, is reasonable. See Royal Thai Government v.
United States, 436 F.3d 1330, 1340 (Fed. Cir. 2006)(deferring to
Commerce’s reasonable interpretation of its regulation.)
Nakornthai asserts that Commerce has not adhered to the use of
the invoice date in every case that has come before it, and has
used initial contract date even in cases where amendments to the
contract have been made after the initial contract date. Pl.’s
Reply Br. 5 (citing Final Results of Original Investigation, and
accompanying Issues and Decision Mem. (Comment 9); Steel Concrete
Court No. 07-00180 Page 17
Reinforcing Bars from Latvia, 71 Fed. Reg. 7,016 (Dep’t Commerce
Feb. 10, 2006) (notice of final results of antidumping duty
administrative review), and accompanying Issues and Decision Mem.,
11; Steel Concrete Reinforcing Bars from Latvia, 71 Fed. Reg.
74,900 (Dep’t Commerce Dec. 13, 2006)(notice of final results of
antidumping duty administrative review), and accompanying Decision
Mem. (Cmt. 2).
The court notes that although the cases to which Nakornthai
cites are indeed cases where Commerce used the contract date rather
than the invoice date, they are also cases in which Commerce
considered a number of factors before arriving at the use of the
contract date. These factors, such as whether there were changes to
material terms such as price and quantity, and how significant
these changes were, are the same factors that Commerce used in
coming to its conclusion to use the invoice date in the present
case. Here, Commerce examined these factors and determined that the
first amendment to the contract changed the quantity tolerance
level, a term which Commerce has a history of considering to be a
material term; as a result, Commerce reasonably determined that the
amendments had the potential to change the material terms of the
contract. This much of Commerce’s determination is therefore in
accordance with law.
Commerce’s determination, however, must also be supported by
substantial evidence. Accordingly, the court now considers whether
Court No. 07-00180 Page 18
Commerce’s choice to use the invoice date as the date of sale,
rather than the contract date, was, based on the record in this
administrative review, so supported.
C. Commerce’s Factual Finding Regarding the Date on which the
Material Terms of Nakornthai’s Sale were established is Incomplete.
In choosing a date of sale, Commerce weighs the evidence
presented and regularly determines the significance of any changes
to the terms of sales involved. See, e.g., Certain Cut-to-Length
Carbon Steel Plate from Romania, 72 Fed. Reg. 6,522 (Dep’t Commerce
Feb. 12, 2007)(notice of final results of antidumping duty
administrative review and final partial rescission), and
accompanying Issues and Decision Mem. (Comment 7) (recognizing as
not significant one sale of a small quantity outside the specified
quantity tolerance level). As Commerce noted in its issues and
decision memorandum here, such a determination involves Commerce’s
consideration of “which date best reflects the date on which the
exporter/producer establishes the material terms of sale (i.e.,
price and quantity).” Proprietary Issues and Decision Mem., 13
(emphasis added).
Commerce argues that the fact that the quantity tolerance
level was changed, in whatever amount, demonstrates that the
contract’s material terms were subject to change and therefore not
finally settled until the invoice date. The problem with this
Court No. 07-00180 Page 19
argument is that it begs the question of whether any such changes
were insignificant.
Nakornthai argues that the contract’s amendments made changes
that were minimal or insignificant. As a result, Nakornthai argues
that it is appropriate to use the original contract date as the
date of sale rather than the final invoice date.
As noted above, the record demonstrates that the original
contract specified both an overall quantity tolerance and an
individual, per item, tolerance level. One of the contract’s
amendments, however, removed the line-item quantity tolerance,
giving Nakornthai greater leeway with respect to the products it
shipped. Commerce examined Nakorthai’s invoices and found that
this leeway allowed Nakornthai to ship a larger amount of one item,
and that this increase was large enough to fall outside the
originally-specified line-item quantity tolerance level. Def.-
Intervenor’s Opp. Mem. 2. This increase appears to distinguish this
case from the Sept. 28, 2001 determination in the original
investigation, Final Results of Original Investigation, and
accompanying Issues and Decision Mem. (Comment 9).
On the other hand, Nakornthai also argues that the contract
amendment affected less than .1% of the total quantity of goods
sold and shipped under the contract. Pl.’s Reply Br. 6. At the
same time, the quantity actually shipped of the one changed line-
item was 14.5% higher than the upper end of the originally-
Court No. 07-00180 Page 20
specified tolerance level, and more than 25% above the specific
line-item quantity for that product specified in the original
contract.10 Commerce did not discuss or make a finding with regard
to this evidence, either on its own or when considered in light of
the elimination of tolerance levels in the contract. Moreover, on
this record, the court cannot conclude that Nakornthai has
necessarily submitted sufficient evidence to establish that the
contract date “better reflects the date on which” Nakornthai and
its wholesaler set the material terms of sale. For example, it is
not apparent to the court whether the variation in the quantities
for one line-item is sufficient to affect “product mix” in any
significant way or to alter the dumping margin. It is of course
settled that the fact that the evidence could support two
inconsistent conclusions does not mean that an agency’s finding is
not supported by substantial evidence, Consolo v. Fed. Maritime
Comm’n, 383 U.S. 607, 620 (1966), and the court will not substitute
its own judgment for that of the agency. Here, however, the agency
has not made a factual finding with regard to the significance of
Nakorthai’s evidence or the date the terms of the contract were
essentially “established” in light of the evidence submitted. The
10
That is, the “total line-item quantity actually shipped
was [ ]MT, which exceeds the initial contract quantity
tolerance limit of [ ]MT by slightly more than [ ] MT.” Pl.’s
Mot. 4.
Court No. 07-00180 Page 21
agency’s determination of this issue is therefore incomplete and
must be remanded.
D. Nakornthai’s Failure to Exhaust is Administrative Remedies
Precludes Judicial Review of Alternative Dates of Sale.
In its briefs presented to the court, Nakornthai asks the
court to consider alternative dates as a date of sale, and not
limit its review to the contract date or the invoice date.
Specifically, Nakornthai argues that, should the court find the
contract date to be inappropriate as the date of sale, the court
should consider using either the date on which the contract was
last amended (“contract amendment date”) or the date on which the
goods shipped (“shipment date”), rather than uphold Commerce’s use
of the invoice date.
In rebuttal, both Commerce and U.S. Steel argue that, because
Nakornthai failed to raise its alternative sales dates before
Commerce, Nakornthai failed to exhaust its administrative remedies.
Defendants argue that Commerce decided on the invoice date as
between two choices: invoice date and contract date, and that the
record amply supports the choice. As a result, they argue,
alternative dates are not properly before the court.
As a judicially created doctrine, the requirement of
exhaustion reflects courts’ reluctance to usurp an agency’s power
by meddling in the agency’s affairs before the issue is ripe for
Court No. 07-00180 Page 22
judicial determination. See, e.g., Sandvik Steel Co. v. United
States, 164 F.3d 596 (Fed. Cir. 1998); Ta Chen Stainless Steel Pipe
v. United States, 28 CIT 627, 342 F. Supp. 2d 1191 (2004). Federal
courts therefore usually require parties to exhaust their
administrative remedies before appealing.
This Court has the benefit of specific statutory support for
the exhaustion doctrine. See, 28 U.S.C. § 2637(d)(“the Court of
International Trade shall, where appropriate, require the
exhaustion of administrative remedies.”).
In determining, case-by-case, when exhaustion is
“appropriate,” the Court has “generally taken a strict view of the
need for parties to exhaust their remedies by raising all arguments
in a timely fashion so that they may be appropriately addressed by
the agency.” Ta Chen, 28 CIT at 644, 342 F. Supp. 2d at 1205;
Pohang Iron and Steel Co. v. United States, 23 CIT 778, 792 (1999).
Here, the court begins its exhaustion analysis with Commerce’s
administrative procedures for challenging an antidumping
determination. This procedure requires parties to submit a case
brief that “must present all arguments that continue in the
submitter’s view to be relevant to the Secretary’s final
determination or final results, including any arguments presented
before the date of publication of the preliminary determination or
preliminary results.” 19 C.F.R. § 351.309(c)(2). The Court
recently noted that the requirement to present “all” relevant
Court No. 07-00180 Page 23
arguments means that arguments that are omitted before the agency
cannot be argued on appeal. Carpenter Tech. Corp. v. United States,
30 CIT ___, 452 F. Supp. 2d 1344 (2006).
Here, Nakornthai did submit a case brief to Commerce following
the preliminary results. The issue, therefore, is whether that
brief’s general argument in favor of using a date other than the
invoice date was sufficient to give Commerce notice of the specific
alternatives that Nakornthai now raises on appeal, where those
alternatives were not mentioned at the administrative level.
Several of the Court’s precedents are instructive. In Ta Chen,
for example, a Taiwanese producer and exporter of fittings
submitted a case brief challenging Commerce’s Constructed Export
Price (“CEP”). Ta Chen, 342 F.Supp. 2d at 1205. The brief argued
specifically that Commerce’s calculation of the CEP adjustment was
unsupported by substantial evidence. Id. Ta Chen also specifically
challenged Commerce’s decision to deny the company a CEP offset
adjustment to normal value to reflect asserted level of trade
differences between the home and U.S. markets. Id. at 1199, 1204.
After the submission of Ta Chen’s brief, Commerce reopened the
response period because there were specific issues to which Ta Chen
had not responded. Id. at 1196. When Ta Chen submitted a revised
brief to the agency, it had deleted its discussion of the CEP
offset issue and had omitted documents on the reimbursement issue.
Id. When Ta Chen raised these specific arguments on appeal before
Court No. 07-00180 Page 24
the court, the court held that Ta Chen, in omitting these arguments
from its revised brief, had failed to present them to Commerce
before making them before the court. Id. at 1205. “Whatever may
have been the merits” of these claims, the court said, they were
“doomed by the company’s failure to raise the issue before the
Commerce Department in a timely fashion.” Id. at 1205.
Paul Muller Industrie Gmbh & Co. v. United States is also
informative here. Paul Muller Industrie Gmbh & Co. v. United
States, 31 CIT __, 502 F. Supp. 2d 1271 (2007). In Paul Muller,
Timken U.S. Corporation, a defendant-intervenor, argued broadly in
its case brief that Commerce needed “to account for U.S. carrying
costs incurred on an ex-factory basis, as it did for the home
market side.” Id. at 1274. Timken also “suggested that the sum of
the time in inventory in the home market, the transit time, and the
time in inventory in the U.S. would be a more accurate approach for
the calculation.” Id. The company also suggested “that Commerce
consider the entered value as the cost of goods upon entry to the
U.S.” Id. On appeal before the court, however, Timken argued more
specifically that for U.S. inventory, “the estimate of inventory
cost must account for costs incident to the transaction between the
producer and the U.S. affiliate such as transportation costs,
duties, and brokerage fees.” Id.
The court refused to allow these more specific arguments on
appeal, finding that “Timken waived its right to raise the issue of
Court No. 07-00180 Page 25
freight, duties, and brokerage fees by failing to raise the issue
before Commerce in the course of its review.” Id. at 1275. The fact
that Timken “raised general issues regarding inventory carrying
costs is not adequate to apprise Commerce of what it would need to
specifically respond to regarding these additional issues,” the
court held, and dismissed Timken’s claims. Id.
To the court, the present case appears similar to that in Paul
Muller. Nakornthai raised broad arguments before Commerce regarding
the propriety of using the invoice date as the date of sale, but did
not raise the specific alternatives it now seeks to raise before the
court. Nakornthai did not properly raise these alternatives before
Commerce, and may not now raise them on appeal because it has not
exhausted its administrative remedies with respect to these
alternative dates.11 Despite Nakornthai’s failure to exhaust,
however, Commerce is still free on remand to determine, in
accordance with its regulations and based on the record, which date
“reflects the date on which the exporter or producer establish[ed]
the material terms of sale.”
11
Nakornthai also argues that even if it has failed in its
duty of exhaustion, such a requirement should be excused here
because the presentation of alternative dates involves a pure
matter of law. However, as the court analysis above has
demonstrated, the agency’s choice of the invoice date over any
other alternative involves both legal and factual components.
Accordingly, the presentation of alternative dates does not
involve a pure matter of law.
Court No. 07-00180 Page 26
Conclusion
Accordingly, Plaintiff’s Motion for Judgment on the Agency
Record is denied-in-part and granted-in-part. The matter is
remanded to the agency for further consideration in accordance with
this opinion. Remand results are due by July 28, 2008. Comments
on the remand results are due by August 18, 2008. Reply comments
are due by September 10, 2008.
SO ORDERED.
/s/Donald C. Pogue
Donald C. Pogue, Judge
Dated: May 28, 2008
New York, N.Y.